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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endorphins and endorphin receptors are believed to modulate pain perception. To investigate whether naloxone, a specific antagonist, could initiate anginal pain during exercise-induced myocardial ischemia in asymptomatic patients with angiographically defined coronary artery disease, a single-blind trial was conducted in 10 men with prior positive exercise electrocardiograms. Multistage treadmill exercise tests were performed twice within a week. On the second test, patients received naloxone, 2 mg intravenously, by a syringe infusion pump. Exercise was terminated because of
fatigue
in 6 patients and completion of the protocol in 4. No patient reported chest pain during exercise. Naloxone did not significantly alter exercise duration, heart rate, blood pressure and ST-segment changes compared with control testing. It is concluded that endorphins do not play a significant role in the recognition of anginal pain in patients who have asymptomatic exercise-induced ischemia.
Am J
Cardiol
1984 Nov 01
PMID:Naloxone and asymptomatic ischemia: failure to induce angina during exercise testing. 649 61
Cardiovascular responses to carrying graded weight loads of 20 to 50 pounds were determined in 52 patients after myocardial infarction (MI) (greater than or equal to 2 months). Sixty percent of the patients were stopped before completing the heaviest weight load (50 pounds for 2 minutes) because of an increase in diastolic blood pressure (BP) to 120 mm Hg (end point) or arm
fatigue
. Compared with symptom-limited graded dynamic exercise, peak systolic and diastolic BP were significantly greater (p less than 0.05 and p less than 0.01, respectively) with weight carrying, while peak heart rate, pressure-rate product, ventilation and oxygen consumption were significantly lower (p less than 0.01). Ischemic responses were less frequent with weight carrying. Patients with severely reduced resting left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (less than 35%) tolerated the weight carrying test as well as patients with normal resting LVEFs (greater than 50%). We conclude that (1) ischemic responses occur less frequently while carrying up to 50 pounds for 2 minutes than with symptom-limited dynamic exercise, (2) a significant number of patients have an increase in diastolic BP greater than or equal to 120 mm Hg while carrying objects that weigh 30 to 50 pounds for 2 minutes, and (3) a poor correlation exists between resting LVEF and tolerance for weight carrying.
Am J
Cardiol
1983 Oct 01
PMID:Response of patients after myocardial infarction to carrying a graded series of weight loads. 662 61
Exercise testing in myocardial infarction before discharge has been used for treatment and exercise prescription in the post-hospital phase. Aim of this study was to investigate the prognostic significance, within one year after the infarction, of submaximal exercise testing before discharge. 428 patients performed the test 14.5 days after the acute episode and were followed for 12 months. The following variables were examined: heart rate, blood pressure, rate-pressure product at maximum exercise, total work and reasons for stopping the test (
fatigue
, submaximal HR, BP greater than or equal to 200/110, hypotension, ischemic or arrhythmic response). Two events were considered: 1) non fatal reinfarction; 2) cardiac death. Two methods of multivariate analysis (Cox's model regression analysis and discriminant analysis) were used. None of the considered variables was found to be predictive of non fatal reinfarction. According to Cox's model total performed work and hypertensive response were found to be predictive of cardiac death, while using discriminant analysis only total work had a predictive value (discriminant function: L = 0.00094 X total work performed + 1.48643; p less than 0.01). In detail, the higher the total work, the better the probabilities of survival, while in patients who stopped the test because of hypertension, the probabilities of cardiac death were lower. Exercise testing performed in uncomplicated myocardial infarction before hospital discharge provides, the basis for a more rational management of patients in the post-infarction phase, and contributes to identify a subset of high-risk patients.
G Ital
Cardiol
1983 Oct
PMID:[Early exercise test after myocardial infarct: prognostic stratification]. 666 5
The premenstrual symptom complex many women experience in a moderate to severe form can be divided into four subgroups. Because there is more than one syndrome and nervous tension is one of the most common symptoms, the term premenstrual tension syndromes (PMTS) is used. The most common subgroup,
PMT
-A, consists of premenstrual anxiety, irritability and nervous tension, sometimes expressed in behavior patterns detrimental to self, family and society. Elevated blood estrogen and low progesterone have been observed in this subgroup. Administration of vitamin B6 at doses of 200-800 mg/day reduces blood estrogen, increases progesterone and results in improved symptoms under double-blind conditions. Women in this subgroup consume an excessive amount of dairy products and refined sugar, and progesterone may be of value in them. The second-most-common subgroup,
PMT
-H, is associated with symptoms of water and salt retention, abdominal bloating, mastalgia and weight gain. The severe form of
PMT
-H is associated with elevated serum aldosterone. Vitamin B6 at high dosage suppresses aldosterone and results in diuresis and clinical improvement. Vitamin E helps the breast symptoms. Methylxanthines and nicotine should be curtailed and sodium limited to 3 gm/day.
PMT
-C is characterized by premenstrual craving for sweets, increased appetite and indulgence in eating refined sugar followed by palpitation,
fatigue
, fainting spells, headache and sometimes the shakes.
PMT
-C patients have increased carbohydrate tolerance and low red-cell magnesium. Adequate magnesium replacement results in improved glucose tolerance tests and decreased
PMT
-C symptoms. Deficiency of the prostaglandin PGE1 may also be involved in
PMT
-C.
PMT
-D is the least common but most dangerous because suicide is most frequent in this subgroup. The symptoms are depression, withdrawal, insomnia, forgetfulness and confusion. In ten
PMT
-D patients the mean blood estrogen was lower and the mean blood progesterone higher than normal during the midluteal phase. Elevated adrenal androgens are observed in some hirsute
PMT
-D patients. Two
PMT
-D patients with normal blood progesterone and estrogens had high lead levels in hair tissue and chronic lead intoxication. This subgroups needs careful medical attention when the symptoms are severe. Therapy should be individualized according to the results of the evaluation.
...
PMID:Nutritional factors in the etiology of the premenstrual tension syndromes. 668 67
The purpose of this study was to determine whether an exercise-induced decrease in ejection fraction in patients with coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction at rest represents ischemia or the nonspecific response of a compromised left ventricle to exercise stress. Accordingly, radionuclide ejection fraction responses of 246 patients with coronary artery disease and an ejection fraction at rest of less than 0.50 were compared with those of a "nonischemic" control group of 48 patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy and a similar degree of ventricular dysfunction. The significance of the ejection fraction response in the group with coronary artery disease was further examined by relating it to the angiographic extent of coronary artery disease, severity of angina, incidence of chest pain and electrocardiographic ST segment depression during exercise and long-term prognosis. The ejection fraction decreased by greater than or equal to 0.01 and greater than or equal to 0.05 during exercise in 48 and 28%, respectively, of the patients with coronary artery disease compared with only 8 and 2%, respectively, of the patients with cardiomyopathy. When exercise was limited by
fatigue
at a submaximal heart rate, the ejection fraction decreased in 25% of the patients with coronary artery disease but in none of the patients with cardiomyopathy. Patients with coronary artery disease whose ejection fraction decreased during exercise had a significantly higher incidence of three vessel disease, exercise-induced chest pain or ST depression and late mortality than did patients whose ejection fraction did not decrease. These relations were confirmed equally in subgroups of patients with moderate (ejection fraction 0.30 to 0.49) and severe (ejection fraction less than 0.30) left ventricular dysfunction. Thus, in patients with coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction at rest, a decrease in ejection fraction during exercise is more likely to indicate ischemia than a nonspecific left ventricular response to exercise stress. In the individual patient, a decrease of 0.05 or greater, or a decrease during submaximal exercise, appears to be highly specific for ischemia. A decrease in ejection fraction identifies a subgroup of patients with a high prevalence of multivessel coronary artery disease and a high risk of death during long-term follow-up on medical therapy.
J Am Coll
Cardiol
1984 Jan
PMID:Mechanism and significance of a decrease in ejection fraction during exercise in patients with coronary artery disease and left ventricular dysfunction at rest. 669 May 59
To investigate the cardiac determinants of treadmill performance in patients able to exercise to volitional
fatigue
, 88 patients with coronary heart disease free of angina pectoris were tested. The exercise tests included supine bicycle radionuclide ventriculography, thallium scintigraphy and treadmill testing with expired gas analysis. The number of abnormal Q wave locations, ejection fraction, end-diastolic volume, cardiac output, exercise-induced ST segment depression and thallium scar and ischemia scores were the cardiac variables considered. Rest and exercise ejection fractions were highly correlated to thallium scar score (r = -0.72 to -0.75, p less than 0.001), but not to maximal oxygen consumption (r = 0.19 to 0.25, p less than 0.05). Fifty-five percent of the variability in predicting treadmill time or estimated maximal oxygen consumption was explained by treadmill test-induced change in heart rate (39%), thallium ischemia score (12%) and cardiac output at rest (4%). The change in heart rate induced by the treadmill test explained only 27% of the variability in measured maximal oxygen consumption. Myocardial damage predicted ejection fraction at rest and the ability to increase heart rate with treadmill exercise appeared as an essential component of exercise capacity. Exercise capacity was only minimally affected by asymptomatic ischemia and was relatively independent of ventricular function.
J Am Coll
Cardiol
1984 Feb
PMID:Treadmill performance and cardiac function in selected patients with coronary heart disease. 669 16
The maximal exercise capacity of patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) is frequently reduced, partly because of inadequate skeletal muscle nutritive flow. To investigate whether this altered muscle nutritive flow is a result of inability of the heart to increase cardiac output normally during exercise, the effect of dobutamine on systemic and leg blood flow and metabolism during maximal exercise was examined in 11 patients with CHF. At maximal exercise before dobutamine, all patients were limited by
fatigue
and had reduced maximal systemic oxygen uptake (11.9 +/- 1.1 ml/min/kg) (+/- standard error of the mean), markedly elevated leg oxygen extraction (85 +/- 2%) and elevated femoral venous lactate (53 +/- 5 mg/dl), consistent with impaired nutritive flow to working muscle. Dobutamine increased the peak cardiac output from (6.5 +/- 0.9 0.74 +/- 0.7 liters/min, p less than 0.01) and peak leg flow (from 1.7 +/- 0.3 to 2.1 +/- 0.3 liters/min, p less than 0.05) during exercise. In contrast, no change occurred in maximal exercise duration (5.5 +/- 0.8 vs 5.8 +/- 0.8 min), peak systemic VO2 (829 +/- 97 vs 869 +/- 77 ml/min), peak arterial lactate (34 +/- 2 vs 35 +/- 4 mg/dl) or peak leg lactate output (248 +/- 39 vs 275 +/- 53 mg/min), whereas peak leg oxygen extraction decreased (85 +/- 2 to 80 +/- 2%, p less than 0.01), suggesting no improvement in muscle nutritive flow. These data suggest that nutritive flow to working skeletal muscle is impaired in patients with CHF and that this impairment is not due simply to an inability of the heart to increase the cardiac output normally during exercise.
Am J
Cardiol
1984 May 01
PMID:Impaired skeletal muscle nutritive flow during exercise in patients with congestive heart failure: role of cardiac pump dysfunction as determined by the effect of dobutamine. 671 33
A 66 year old black man was examined because of
fatigue
and progressive right heart failure. A striking finding on his echocardiogram was intense and slow-moving contrast in the inferior vena cava. Cardiac catheterization revealed constrictive pericarditis, and pericardiectomy was performed. Postoperatively, spontaneous contrast was no longer present. This case helps explain the origin of spontaneous inferior vena cava contrast.
J Am Coll
Cardiol
1984 Jul
PMID:Spontaneous contrast in the inferior vena cava in a patient with constrictive pericarditis. 673 42
Short-term efficacy of diltiazem in prolonging exercise end points in patients with chronic stable atherosclerosis-associated angina has been demonstrated. The safety and efficacy of diltiazem were examined in a placebo-controlled exercise study over 4 months (eight patients) and subsequently at 12 to 16 months (six patients). Three end points were evaluated: (1) time to onset of angina or
fatigue
if angina were eliminated; (2) time to 1 mm S-T segment depression or termination of exercise if S-T depression were eliminated; and (3) time to termination of exercise (2+ angina or
fatigue
). All end points were significantly prolonged over the medium-term 4 month study and decreased again significantly with return to placebo. Maximal effect occurred at 3 months with the first end point increasing from a mean +/- standard error of the mean of 7.2 +/- 1.2 to 10.2 +/- 0.9 minutes (p less than 0.01), the second end point from 8.0 +/- 0.9 to 10.3 +/- 1.0 minutes (p less than 0.01), and the third end point from 9.6 +/- 1.3 to 11.9 +/- 0.8 minutes (p less than 0.05). At 12 to 16 months efficacy was again present. Comparisons for 3 month peak effect with 12 to 16 month long-term effect and subsequent final placebo period were, respectively: first end point, 10.5 +/- 1.3, 9.4 +/- 1.0 and 6.6 +/- 1.7 minutes; second end point, 11.0 +/- 1.3, 10.2 +/- 1.2 and 6.3 +/- 0.7 minutes; and third end point, 12.1 +/- 1.0, 11.0 +/- 1.0 and 9.2 +/- 1.5 minutes. No significant adverse effects of hematologic abnormalities were noted.
Am J
Cardiol
1982 Feb 18
PMID:Long-term efficacy of diltiazem in chronic stable angina associated with atherosclerosis: effect on treadmill exercise. 680 Feb 53
Rest and exercise right and left ventricular function were compared using equilibrium gated radionuclide angiography in 19 normal sedentary control subjects (mean age 28 years, range 22 to 34) and 34 patients with hemodynamically documented congenital ventricular septal defect (VSD) (mean age 27 years, range 20 to 40). The 34 patients with VSD were divided into 3 groups: those in Group 1 (17 patients) had pulmonary to systemic blood flow ratios of less than 2 to 1; those in Group 2 (12 patients) had prior surgical closure of VSD (mean interval from surgery 17 years, range 9 to 22), and those in Group 3 (5 patients) had Eisenmenger's complex. Gated radionuclide angiography was performed at rest and during each level of graded supine bicycle exercise to
fatigue
. Heart rate, blood pressure, maximal work load achieved, and right and left ventricular ejection fractions were assessed. The control subjects demonstrated an increase in both the left and right ventricular ejection fractions with exercise (0.70 +/- 0.07 to 0.79 +/- 0.05 and 0.46 +/- 0.06 to 0.57 +/- 0.04; p less than 0.001 for left and right ventricles, respectively). All study groups failed to demonstrate an increase in ejection fraction in either ventricle with exercise. Furthermore, resting left ventricular ejection fraction in Groups 2 and 3 was lower than that in the control subjects (0.59 +/- 0.09 and 0.54 +/- 0.06 versus 0.70 +/- 0.07; p less than 0.001) and resting right ventricular ejection fraction was lower in Group 3 versus control subjects (0.30 +/- 0.07 versus 0.46 +/- 0.06; p less than 0.001). Thus (1) left and right ventricular function on exercise were abnormal in patients with residual VSD as compared with control subjects; (2) rest and exercise left ventricular ejection fractions remained abnormal despite surgical closure of VSD in the remote past; (3) resting left and right ventricular function was abnormal in patients with Eisenmenger's complex; (4) lifelong volume overload may be detrimental to myocardial function.
Am J
Cardiol
1983 Jan 15
PMID:Rest and exercise ventricular function in adults with congenital ventricular septal defects. 682 41
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